Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act Provisions; Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Northeast (NE) Multispecies Fishery; Amendment 17, 16942-16949 [2012-7062]
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16942
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 57 / Friday, March 23, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
211.5885, 211.6405, 211.6425, 211.6535,
211.7290; effective June 25, 2010.
(B) Part 211: Definitions and General
Provisions, Sections 211.101, 211.102,
211.200, 211.233, 211.235, 211.260,
211.481, 211.492, 211.540, 211.715,
211.735, 211.820, 211.825, 211.880,
211.954, 211.965, 211.1128, 211.1455,
211.1560, 211.1565, 211.1655, 211.1700,
211.1872, 211.1876, 211.1877, 211.1880,
211.1882, 211.1883, 211.2040, 211.2055,
211.2210, 211.2310, 211.2320, 211.2360,
211.2369, 211.2415, 211.2525, 211.2622,
211.2825, 211.2955, 211.2956, 211.2958,
211.2960, 211.2980, 211.3095, 211.3120,
211.3240, 211.3505, 211.3665, 211.3760,
211.3775, 211.3785, 211.3820, 211.3925,
211.3961, 211.3966, 211.3967, 211.3968,
211.3969, 211.3975, 211.4052, 211.4080,
211.4220, 211.4285, 211.4455, 211.4540,
211.4735, 211.4760, 211.4765, 211.4768,
211.4769, 211.4895, 211.4900, 211.5012,
211.5061, 211.5062, 211.5075, 211.5090,
211.5400, 211.5520, 211.5550, 211.5800,
211.5890, 211.5985, 211.5987, 211.6012,
211.6015, 211.6017, 211.6020, 211.6063,
211.6065, 211.6400, 211.6427, 211.6460,
211.6585, 211.6640, 211.6670, 211.6690,
211.6720, 211.6740, 211.6780, 211.6825,
211.6885, 211.7220, 211.7240; effective
September 14, 2010.
(C) Part 211: Definitions and General
Provisions, Sections 211.493, 211.2200,
211.2358, 211.2800, 211.3985, 211.4460,
211.5140, 211.6587, 211.6635; effective
July 27, 2011.
(D) Part 218: Organic Material
Emission Standards and Limitations for
the Chicago Area, Subpart F: Coating
Operations, Section 218.218; effective
March 23, 2010.
(E) Part 218: Organic Material
Emission Standards and Limitations for
the Chicago Area, Subpart E: Solvent
Cleaning, Section 218.181, Subpart H:
Printing and Publishing, Sections
218.403, 218.405, 218.406, 218.407,
218.408, 218.410, 218.412, 218.413,
218.416; effective June 25, 2010.
(F) Part 218: Organic Material
Emission Standards and Limitations for
the Chicago Area, Subpart A: General
Provisions, Sections 218.106, 218.112,
Subpart F: Coating Operations, Sections
218.205, 218.208, 218.210, 218.212,
218.219, Subpart II: Fiberglass Boat
Manufacturing Materials, Section
218.890, Subpart JJ: Miscellaneous
Industrial Adhesives, Section 218.900;
effective September 14, 2010.
(G) Part 218: Organic Material
Emission Standards and Limitations for
the Chicago Area, Subpart A: General
Provisions, Section 218.105, Subpart E:
Solvent Cleaning, Section 218.187,
Subpart F: Coating Operations, Sections
218.204, 218.207, 218.211, 218.217,
Subpart H: Printing and Publishing,
Sections 218.401, 218.402, 218.404,
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218.409, 218.411, 218.415, 218.417,
Subpart II: Fiberglass Boat
Manufacturing Materials, Sections
218.891, 218.892, 218.894, Subpart JJ:
Miscellaneous Industrial Adhesives,
Sections 218.901, 218.902, 218.903,
218.904; effective July 27, 2011.
(H) Part 219: Organic Material
Emission Standards and Limitations for
the Metro East Area, Subpart F: Coating
Operations, Section 219.218; effective
March 23, 2010.
(I) Part 219: Organic Material
Emission Standards and Limitations for
the Metro East Area, Subpart E: Solvent
Cleaning, Section 219.181, Subpart H:
Printing and Publishing, Sections
219.402, 219.403, 219.405, 219.406,
219.407, 219.408, 219.410, 219.412,
219.413, 219.416; effective June 25,
2010.
(J) Part 219: Organic Material
Emission Standards and Limitations for
the Metro East Area, Subpart A: General
Provisions, Sections 219.106, 219.112,
Subpart F: Coating Operations, Sections
219.205, 219.208, 219.210, 219.212,
219.219, Subpart II: Fiberglass Boat
Manufacturing Materials, Section
219.890, Subpart JJ: Miscellaneous
Industrial Adhesives, Section 219.900;
effective September 14, 2010.
(K) Part 219: Organic Material
Emission Standards and Limitations for
the Metro East Area, Subpart A: General
Provisions, Section 219.105, Subpart E:
Solvent Cleaning, Section 219.187,
Subpart F: Coating Operations, Sections
219.204, 219.207, 219.211, 219.217,
Subpart H: Printing and Publishing,
Sections 219.401, 219.404, 219.409,
219.411, 219.415, 219.417, Subpart II:
Fiberglass Boat Manufacturing
Materials, Sections 219.891, 219.892,
219.894, Subpart JJ: Miscellaneous
Industrial Adhesives, Sections 219.901,
219.902, 219.903, 219.904; effective July
27, 2011.
(ii) Additional material. On February
28, 2011, Illinois EPA submitted an
email confirmation that the sewage
treatment plant exemption in Subpart
TT of Parts 218 and 219 does not apply
to industrial wastewater.
[FR Doc. 2012–6938 Filed 3–22–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 110901552–20494–02]
RIN 0648–BB34
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the
Northeastern United States; Northeast
(NE) Multispecies Fishery; Amendment
17
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule implements
measures in Amendment 17 to the
Northeast Multispecies Fishery
Management Plan which was approved
on March 8, 2012. This action amends
the Northeast Multispecies Fishery
Management Plan to explicitly define
and facilitate the effective operation of
state-operated permit banks. As
proposed in Amendment 17, stateoperated permit banks may be allocated
an annual catch entitlement and
specifically authorized to provide their
annual catch entitlement and/or days-atsea to approved groundfish sectors to
enhance the fishing opportunities
available to sector members. This action
also approves a provision allowing
NMFS to issue a days-at-sea credit to a
vessel that cancels a fishing trip prior to
setting or hauling fishing gear.
DATES: This rule is effective April 23,
2012.
SUMMARY:
Copies of the Amendment
17 document, including an
environmental assessment and a
regulatory impact review, are available
from the Northeast Regional Office of
the National Marine Fisheries Service,
55 Great Republic Drive, Gloucester,
MA 01930. This document is also
accessible via the Internet at https://
www.nero.noaa.gov.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this final rule
may be submitted to the Northeast
Regional Office and by email to
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov, or fax
to (202) 395–7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
William Whitmore, Fishery Policy
Analyst, (978) 281–9182; fax: (978) 281–
9135.
ADDRESSES:
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The final rule implementing
Amendment 13 to the Northeast (NE)
Multispecies Fishery Management Plan
(FMP) (69 FR 22906; April 27, 2004)
specified a process for forming sectors
within the NE multispecies fishery,
implemented restrictions applicable to
all sectors, and authorized the allocation
of a total allowable catch (TAC) for
specific groundfish species to a sector.
As approved in Amendment 13, each
sector must prepare a sector operations
plan, which must be submitted to NMFS
along with signed sector member
contracts and an environmental
assessment (EA), or other appropriate
environmental analysis. Amendment 16
(74 FR 18262; April 9, 2010) expanded
sector management measures and
authorized 17 new sectors, for a total of
19 sectors. The amendment defined a
sector as ‘‘[a] group of persons (three or
more persons, none of whom have an
ownership interest in the other two
persons in the sector) holding limited
access vessel permits who have
voluntarily entered into a contract and
agree to certain fishing restrictions for a
specified period of time, and which has
been granted a TAC(s) [sic] in order to
achieve objectives consistent with
applicable FMP goals and objectives.’’ A
sector’s TAC is referred to as an annual
catch entitlement (ACE). Each sector’s
ACE for a particular stock represents a
share of that stock’s annual catch limit
(ACL) available to commercial NE
multispecies vessels, based upon the
potential sector contribution (PSC) of
permits participating in that sector.
Regional Administrator (RA) approval is
required for a sector to be authorized to
fish and to be allocated an ACE for
stocks of regulated NE multispecies
during each fishing year. Each sector is
responsible for monitoring its catch,
reporting catch to NMFS, and ensuring
it does not exceed its ACE.
In 2009 and 2010, NOAA provided
nearly $5 million in funding through
Federal grants to the states of Maine,
New Hampshire, and Rhode Island for
the express purpose of establishing
several ‘‘permit banks’’ of NE
multispecies fishing vessel permits.1
The permit banks were developed
jointly by the states and NMFS, through
memoranda of agreement (MOA), to
help promote the effective
implementation of catch share programs
1 $1 million initially provided to the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts for a permit bank
has been, at the request of the Commonwealth,
reprogrammed for use in a revolving loan fund
intended to serve a similar purpose as the permit
bank.
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in New England and to mitigate some of
the potential adverse socio-economic
impacts to fishing communities and
small-scale fishing businesses. The
intent of the permit bank program is for
states to use the funding to obtain
fishing vessel permits and then to
provide the fishing opportunities
associated with those permits in the
form of ACE and/or days-at-sea (DAS) to
qualified fishermen.
State-operated permit banks are not
specifically recognized under the
current NE Multispecies FMP, and are
not allocated, or authorized to transfer,
ACE outside of the current sector
program. Because of this, the only
mechanism currently available for a
state-operated permit bank to be
allocated and to transfer ACE is for the
state to either enroll in an existing
sector or to form its own sector with
other permit holders. Both of these
methods complicate the operation of the
state permit banks and add
administrative requirements that are
redundant with requirements of
memoranda of agreement (MOA) that
were signed with the states and NOAA’s
National Marine Fisheries Service
(NMFS) as a prerequisite for receiving
the grant awards.
This action implements Amendment
17 to the NE Multispecies FMP which
was approved on March 8, 2012. The
amendment as implemented explicitly
defines and facilitates the effective
operation of state-operated permit banks
by specifically recognizing stateoperated permit banks under the
provisions of the NE Multispecies FMP.
As such, a state-operated permit bank
can now be allocated ACE and is able
to transfer ACE to an approved sector
without having to enroll in another
sector or create its own sector.
Separately from Amendment 17, this
action also amends the regulations
implementing the NE Multispecies,
Monkfish, and Atlantic Sea Scallop
FMPs to include a provision that would
allow NMFS to issue a DAS credit to a
vessel that canceled a fishing trip prior
to setting or hauling fishing gear and if
the vessel, therefore, did not catch or
land fish at any time on the trip.
A notice of availability for
Amendment 17 was published in the
Federal Register on December 12, 2011
(76 FR 77200) and public comments
were accepted through February 10,
2012. A proposed rule to implement
measures in Amendment 17 was
published in the Federal Register on
December 22, 2011 (76 FR 79612) and
public comments were accepted through
January 23, 2012. The Amendment 17
proposed rule included a detailed
description of sector management, state-
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16943
operated permit banks, the proposed
measures, and other issues that
influenced the development of this
action. Amendment 17 was approved on
March 8, 2012.
Approved Measures
The following summarizes the
approved Amendment 17 measures as
well as the DAS credit provision as
previously proposed. These measures
build upon the provisions implemented
by previous management actions and
are intended to either supplement or
replace existing regulations that would
otherwise apply to state-operated permit
banks. This final rule also revises
regulations that are not specifically
identified in Amendment 17, but are
necessary to clarify existing provisions,
as described further below.
1. Definition of a State-Operated Permit
Bank
Amendment 17 defines a stateoperated permit bank as a permit
depository established through an
agreement between NOAA and a state in
which Federal grant funds are used by
the state to obtain Federal fishing vessel
permits so that the fishing access
privileges associated with those permits
may be allocated by the state to
qualified sectors. State-operated permit
banks are not equivalent to groundfish
sectors.
State-operated permit banks shall be
deemed to meet the definition above,
and therefore qualify to operate as
intended in this action, so long as the
state-operated permit bank was initially
established using a Federal grant award
from NOAA for this purpose and the
state maintains a valid MOA with
NMFS. The MOA between NMFS and
each state establishes the parameters
that the state must follow in order to
receive Federal grant funding that is
then applied towards purchasing NE
multispecies permitted vessels and
transferring the ACE allocated to the
permit bank to approved sectors. A
state-operated permit bank must have a
valid MOA in order to operate. Stateoperated permit banks are no longer
subject to the requirement that three or
more persons be included in a sector.
2. Clarification and Streamlining of
Administrative Procedures and
Requirements for State-Operated Permit
Banks
This action allows state-operated
permit banks to be allocated ACE and/
or DAS and authorizes them to provide
ACE to approved groundfish sectors to
enhance the fishing opportunities
available to sector members. Stateoperated permit banks are required to
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comply with the terms and conditions
of any applicable Federal grant
agreement (i.e., a Federal grant award
provided to a state for the purpose of
establishing, enhancing, or operating a
permit bank), as well as meet the
requirements specified in an MOA
established with NMFS for
administering the permit bank.
State-operated permit banks are
required to report to the Council
annually on the performance of the
permit bank. Such reports must include,
to the extent that the information does
not conflict with any regulations
regarding the protection of personal
and/or proprietary information, all
reporting requirements within the MOA.
State-operated permit banks are exempt
from many of the sector reporting
requirements because state-operated
permit banks are prohibited from
actively fishing.
State-operated permit banks are not
authorized to acquire, except as
described below, additional ACE or
DAS for a fishing year through a transfer
from a sector or other vessels because
the purpose of the state-operated permit
banks is to transfer out ACE and DAS
to sector fishermen in need of additional
allocation, not to accumulate ACE or
DAS. However, if a sector receives a
transfer of ACE, or a vessel receives
DAS, from a state-operated permit bank
but wishes to return either the (unused)
ACE or DAS to the permit bank, NMFS
could, upon written agreement by both
parties, void the initial transfer, thereby
returning the ACE or DAS to the permit
bank. The state permit bank would then
be free to redistribute the available ACE
or DAS to another sector or vessel. In
addition, and subject to the terms and
conditions of the states’ permit bank
MOAs with NMFS, state-operated
permit banks are authorized to transfer
ACE, on a stock-by-stock basis, to other
state-operated permit banks for the
purpose of maximizing the fishing
opportunities made available by the
permit banks to sector members. For
example, the Rhode Island state permit
bank could transfer ACE for Gulf of
Maine cod to the Maine state permit
bank in exchange for ACE for Southern
New England/Mid-Atlantic yellowtail
flounder.
For the reasons stated in the proposed
rule, NMFS highlighted the need for
public comment in the proposed rule on
two specific provisions of Amendment
17 raised by the New England Fishery
Management Council, detailed in the
September 7, 2011, ‘‘deeming’’ letter to
the Regional Administrator.
First, NMFS specifically solicited
public comment on whether stateoperated permit banks should be
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prohibited from using additional funds
to acquire permits prior to Council
review. The State of New Hampshire
commented that it was ‘‘not opposed’’ to
the proposed regulation as written.
However, NMFS has determined that
the proposed rule is inconsistent with
Amendment 17 language and it is not
appropriate in the context of
Amendment 17 for NMFS to prohibit
the mere acquisition of a permit that
may or may not be used in the stateoperated permit bank. Moreover, there
is nothing in the current regulations that
prohibits any interested party, including
a state, from acquiring a permit.
Therefore, the Council cannot prohibit a
state from acquiring a permit with
additional funding it receives or impose
any conditions on the acquisition of
such a permit. If more funds become
available to a state, the use of those
additional funds to allocate or transfer
ACE by a state-operated permit bank as
defined in this action must first be
reviewed by the Council for consistency
with the goals and objectives of the NE
Multispecies FMP prior to the state
using those funds outside of the sector
process. A state would not be
authorized to allocate or transfer any
ACE that may be associated with new
permits obtained as a result of the
additional funds, unless the state either:
(1) provides the Council the opportunity
to review the implications of the
expanded permit bank to the goals and
objectives of the NE Multispecies FMP;
or (2) forms or joins an approved
groundfish sector. This language is
consistent with the language in
Amendment 17 as approved by the
Council. The regulations implemented
by this rule have been changed
accordingly.
Second, NMFS sought public
comment on whether state-operated
permit banks should be allowed to
carry-over unused ACE and DAS from
one fishing year into the next. In
deeming the proposed regulations
necessary and appropriate for
implementing Amendment 17, the
Council questioned whether the
carryover of unused ACE provision for
sectors in current regulations should be
included in these implementing
regulations even though the amendment
is silent on this issue. However, the
Council did not submit a comment on
this issue. In the absence of any
comments on this issue, and because the
amendment itself and accompanying
regulations do not propose carry-over
provisions, NMFS cannot unilaterally
add such a provision to this final rule.
Moreover, NMFS summarized in the
proposed rule that there are reasons
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distinct from the sector process that
explain why carry-over may not be
appropriate for state-operated permit
banks. Therefore, state-operated permit
banks cannot carry-over uncaught ACE
from one fishing year to the next.
3. Canceled Trip DAS Credit
This final rule implements a
provision that is separate from
Amendment 17, allowing NMFS to
credit DAS to a vessel that cancels a
fishing trip prior to setting or hauling
fishing gear and which, therefore, does
not catch or land fish at any time on the
trip. This provision applies to all
fisheries that operate under a DAS
management system, specifically the NE
multispecies, monkfish, and Atlantic
sea scallop fisheries. Because this DAS
credit would only be granted for
situations in which no fishing activity
occurs, it is not expected to have a
negative impact on fishing-related
mortality in the DAS fisheries. This
measure will be applied retroactively for
the 2011 fishing years for those fisheries
(the fishing years are not the same).
To ensure the enforceability of this
provision, vessels seeking a DAS credit
must notify NMFS’ Office of Law
Enforcement (OLE) to coordinate a
monitored landing event. Vessels that
are required to use a vessel monitoring
system (VMS) must send a VMS email
to OLE at the earliest opportunity prior
to crossing the VMS demarcation line
upon return to port. Vessels not
required to use a VMS must use the
interactive voice response (IVR) line to
make the notification. Additionally,
both VMS and IVR vessels must submit
a written DAS credit form along with
the vessel trip report for the canceled
trip to NMFS.
The following information must be
submitted on the written DAS credit
request form: Owner/corporation name;
vessel name; permit number; U.S. Coast
Guard documentation number or state
registration number; vessel operator
name; trip departure and landing date;
date and time VMS email was sent or
IVR backup line was called; and reason
for canceling the trip. Forms must be
submitted within 30 days from the day
the vessel returned to port on the
canceled trip.
For DAS credits that are requested
near the end of the fishing year, the
credited DAS will apply to the year in
which the canceled trip occurred.
Credited DAS that remain unused at the
end of the fishing year or are not
credited until the following fishing year
can be carried over into the next fishing
year, provided they do not to exceed the
maximum number of DAS allowed to be
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carried over for the fishery being
credited.
Comments and Responses
Three comments were received on the
proposed rule. Two comments, one from
the State of New Hampshire, and one
from a member of the public, expressed
general support for the amendment. One
comment from a member of the fishing
industry expressed concern about
common pool vessels being excluded
from state-operated permit bank ACE.
Comment 1: The State of New
Hampshire did not oppose the Council
reviewing plans by its state-operated
permit bank prior to acquiring
additional Federal fishing permits.
Response: NMFS has determined that
the proposed regulation for this
provision is not consistent with
Amendment 17 and it is not appropriate
for NMFS to prohibit the mere
acquisition of a permit by a state in the
context of Amendment 17. In addition,
nothing in the current regulations for
this provision prohibits any interested
party, including a state-operated permit
bank, from acquiring a permit.
Therefore, this rule does not prohibit a
state from acquiring a permit or impose
conditions on a state regarding such an
acquisition. Rather, this rule provides
that if more funds from any source
become available to a state to obtain
additional permits, the state-operated
permit bank may not allocate or transfer
ACE that may be associated with the
new permit until the state-operated
permit bank provides the Council with
the opportunity to review the
implications of the expanded permit
bank with the goals and objectives of the
NE Multispecies FMP. However, once
the Council has the opportunity to
conduct such a review, the stateoperated permit bank may allocate or
transfer any such ACE provided it is
consistent with the MOAs with NOAA
and other applicable law.
Comment 2: The State of New
Hampshire was not opposed to allowing
DAS credit to vessels cancelling fishing
trips prior to engaging in fishing activity
for fisheries managed under a DAS
system.
Response: NMFS agrees with this
comment and has approved this
measure in this action.
Comment 3: One individual expressed
concern that fishermen not enrolled in
a sector (i.e., the common pool) are
unable to acquire ACE from stateoperated permit banks.
Response: Prior to Amendment 17,
the only entities able to transfer ACE
were approved sectors. Amendment 17
allows a state-operated permit bank to
transfer ACE and/or DAS to another
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sector without becoming or enrolling in
a sector. Neither sectors nor stateoperated permit banks are able to
transfer ACE to an individual not
enrolled in a sector. However, common
pool vessels may lease DAS from a stateoperated permit bank for cooperative
research purposes. Allowing a permit
bank to transfer ACE to an individual
fisherman in the common pool is
inconsistent with current regulations
and the FMP and therefore prohibited.
Moreover, because this type of transfer
regarding sectors was not proposed in
Amendment 17, NMFS may not
unilaterally add it.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
As described above, NMFS has
determined that the proposed rule is
inconsistent with Amendment 17
language, and that it is not appropriate
in the context of Amendment 17 for
NMFS to prohibit the mere acquisition
of a permit that may or may not be used
in the state-operated permit bank.
Therefore, the regulation at 50 CFR
648.87(e)(6) has been modified in this
final rule to be consistent with the
language in Amendment 17 as approved
by the Council.
Classification
The Administrator, Northeast Region,
NMFS, determined that Amendment 17
to the NE Multispecies FMP is necessary
for the conservation and management of
the groundfish fishery and that it is
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act and other applicable laws.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the Chief Counsel
for Regulation of the Department of
Commerce certified to the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration during the proposed
rule stage that this action would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The factual basis for the certification
was published in the proposed rule and
is not repeated here. No comments were
received regarding this certification. As
a result, a regulatory flexibility analysis
was not required and none was
prepared.
This final rule contains a collectionof-information requirement subject to
the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and
that has been submitted for approval by
OMB under control numbers 0648–0202
and 0648–1212. NMFS will notify the
affected public through a follow-up
notice in the Federal Register
announcing OMB’s clearance of the
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16945
collection-of-information requirements.
Under this action, in order to request a
DAS credit, vessel owners are required
to provide NMFS with an initial
notification as well as the submission of
a DAS credit request form. The public
burden for requesting a DAS credit is
estimated to average 15 minutes per
application, including the time for
reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection
information. Send comments regarding
these burden estimates or any other
aspect of this data collection, including
suggestions for reducing the burden, to
NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and by email to
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov, or fax
to 202–395–7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, and no person shall be
subject to penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 648
Fish, Fisheries, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: March 19, 2012.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Acting Assistant Administrator, For Fisheries,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 648 is amended
as follows:
PART 648—FISHERIES OF THE
NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
1. The authority citation for part 648
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 648.2, revise the definition for
‘‘Annual catch entitlement (ACE)’’ and
add a new definition for ‘‘State-operated
permit bank’’ in alphabetical order to
read as follows:
■
§ 648.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Annual catch entitlement (ACE), with
respect to the NE multispecies fishery,
means the share of the annual catch
limit (ACL) for each NE multispecies
stock that is allocated to an individual
sector or state-operated permit bank
based upon the cumulative fishing
history attached to each permit
participating in that sector or held by a
state-operated permit bank in a given
year. This share may be adjusted due to
penalties for exceeding the sector’s ACE
for a particular stock in earlier years, or
due to other violations of the FMP,
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including the yearly sector operations
plan. When a sector’s or state-operated
permit bank’s share of a NE
multispecies stock, as determined by the
fishing histories of vessels participating
in that sector or permits held by a stateoperated permit bank, is multiplied by
the available catch, the result is the
amount of ACE (live weight in pounds)
that can be harvested (landings and
discards) by participants in that sector
or transferred by a state-operated permit
bank, during a particular fishing year.
*
*
*
*
*
State-operated permit bank means a
depository established and operated by
a state through an agreement between
NMFS and a state in which Federal
grant funds have been used by the state
to obtain Federal fishing vessel permits
so that the fishing access privileges
associated with those permits may be
allocated to qualified persons and that
meets the requirement of § 648.87(e).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 648.53, revise paragraph (f) to
read as follows:
§ 648.53 Acceptable biological catch
(ABC), annual catch limits (ACL), annual
catch targets (ACT), DAS allocations, and
individual fishing quotas (IFQ).
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(f) DAS credits—(1) Good Samaritan
credit. A limited access vessel operating
under the DAS program and that spends
time at sea assisting in a USCG search
and rescue operation or assisting the
USCG in towing a disabled vessel, and
that can document the occurrence
through the USCG, will not accrue DAS
for the time documented.
(2) Canceled trip DAS credit. A
limited access vessel operating under
the DAS program and that ends a fishing
trip prior to setting and/or hauling
fishing gear for any reason may request
a cancelled trip DAS credit for the trip
based on the following conditions and
requirements:
(i) There is no fish onboard the vessel
and no fishing operations on the vessel
were initiated, including setting and/or
hauling fishing gear; and
(ii) The owner or operator of the
vessel fishing under a DAS program and
required to use a VMS as specified
under § 648.10(b) makes an initial trip
cancelation notification from sea, at the
time the trip was canceled, or at the
earliest opportunity prior to crossing the
demarcation line as defined at
§ 648.10(a). These reports are in the
form of an email to NMFS Office of Law
Enforcement and include at least the
following information: Operator name;
vessel name; vessel permit number; port
where vessel will return; date trip
started; estimated date/time of return to
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port; and a statement by the operator
that no fish were onboard and no fishing
activity occurred; and
(iii) The owner or operator of the
vessel operating under the DAS program
required to use the IVR call in as
specified under § 648.10(h) makes an
initial trip cancelation notification to
NMFS by calling the IVR back at the
time the trip was canceled, or at the
earliest opportunity prior to returning to
port. This request must include at least
the following information: Operator
name; vessel name; vessel permit
number; port where vessel will return;
date trip started; estimated date/time of
return to port; and a statement from the
operator that no fish were onboard and
no fishing activity occurred; and
(iv) The owner or operator of the
vessel requesting a canceled trip DAS
credit, in addition to the requirements
in paragraphs (f)(2)(ii) and (iii) of this
section, submits a written DAS credit
request form to NMFS within 30 days of
the vessel’s return to port from the
canceled trip. This application must
include at least the following
information: Date and time when the
vessel canceled the fishing trip; date
and time of trip departure and landing;
operator name; owner/corporation
name; permit number; hull
identification number; vessel name; date
and time notification requirements
specified under paragraphs (f)(2)(ii) and
(iii) of this section were made; reason
for canceling the trip; and owner/
operator signature and date; and
(v) The vessel trip report for the
canceled trip as required under
§ 648.7(b) is submitted along with the
DAS credit request form; and
(vi) For DAS credits that are requested
near the end of the fishing year as
defined at § 648.2, and approved by the
Regional Administrator, the credited
DAS apply to the fishing year in which
the canceled trip occurred. Credited
DAS that remain unused at the end of
the fishing year or that are not credited
until the following fishing year may be
carried over into the next fishing year,
not to exceed the maximum number of
carryover DAS as specified under
paragraph (d) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. In § 648.82, remove and reserve
paragraph (m) and revise paragraph (f)
to read as follows:
§ 648.82 Effort-control program for NE
multispecies limited access vessels.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) DAS credits—(1) Good Samaritan
credit. A limited access vessel fishing
under the DAS program and that spends
time at sea assisting in a USCG search
and rescue operation or assisting the
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USCG in towing a disabled vessel, and
that can document the occurrence
through the USCG, shall not accrue DAS
for the time documented.
(2) Canceled trip DAS credit. A
limited access vessel operating under
the DAS program and that ends a fishing
trip prior to setting and/or hauling
fishing gear for any reason may request
a cancelled trip DAS credit for the trip
based on the following conditions and
requirements:
(i) There is no fish onboard the vessel
and no fishing operations on the vessel
were initiated, including setting and/or
hauling fishing gear; and
(ii) The owner or operator of the
vessel fishing under a DAS program and
required to use a VMS as specified
under § 648.10(b) makes an initial trip
cancelation notification from sea, at the
time the trip was canceled, or at the
earliest opportunity prior to crossing the
demarcation line as defined at
§ 648.10(a). These reports are in the
form of an email to NMFS Office of Law
Enforcement and include at least the
following information: Operator name;
vessel name; vessel permit number; port
where vessel will return; date trip
started; estimated date/time of return to
port; and a statement from the operator
must that no fish were onboard and no
fishing activity occurred; and
(iii) The owner or operator of the
vessel operating under the DAS program
required to use the IVR call in as
specified under § 648.10(h) makes an
initial trip cancelation notification to
NMFS by calling the IVR back at the
time the trip was canceled, or at the
earliest opportunity prior to returning to
port. This request must include at least
the following information: Operator
name; vessel name; vessel permit
number; port where vessel will return;
date trip started; estimated date/time of
return to port; and a statement from the
operator that no fish were onboard and
no fishing activity occurred; and
(iv) The owner or operator of the
vessel requesting a canceled trip DAS
credit, in addition to the requirements
in paragraphs (f)(2)(ii) and (iii) of this
section, submits a written DAS credit
request form to NMFS within 30 days of
the vessel’s return to port from the
canceled trip. This application must
include at least the following
information: Date and time when the
vessel canceled the fishing trip; date
and time of trip departure and landing;
operator name; owner/corporation
name; permit number; hull
identification number; vessel name; date
and time notification requirements
specified under paragraphs (f)(2)(ii) and
(iii) of this section were made; reason
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for canceling the trip; and owner/
operator signature and date; and
(v) The vessel trip report for the
canceled trip as required under
§ 648.7(b) is submitted along with the
DAS credit request form; and
(vi) For DAS credits that are requested
near the end of the fishing year as
defined at § 648.2, and approved by the
Regional Administrator, the credited
DAS apply to the fishing year in which
the canceled trip occurred. Credited
DAS that remain unused at the end of
the fishing year or are not credited until
the following fishing year may be
carried over into the next fishing year,
not to exceed the maximum number of
carryover DAS as specified under
paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
(3) DAS credit for standing by
entangled whales. A limited access
vessel fishing under the DAS program
that reports and stands by an entangled
whale may request a DAS credit for the
time spent standing by the whale. The
following conditions and requirements
must be met to receive this credit:
(i) At the time the vessel begins
standing by the entangled whale, the
vessel operator must notify the USCG
and the Center for Coastal Studies, or
another organization authorized by the
Regional Administrator, of the location
of the entangled whale and that the
vessel is going to stand by the entangled
whale until the arrival of an authorized
response team;
(ii) Only one vessel at a time may
receive credit for standing by an
entangled whale. A vessel standing by
an entangled whale may transfer its
stand-by status to another vessel while
waiting for an authorized response team
to arrive, provided it notifies the USCG
and the Center for Coastal Studies, or
another organization authorized by the
Regional Administrator, of the transfer.
The vessel to which stand-by status is
transferred must also notify the USCG
and the Center for Coastal Studies or
another organization authorized by the
Regional Administrator of this transfer
and comply with the conditions and
restrictions of this part;
(iii) The stand-by vessel must be
available to answer questions on the
condition of the animal, possible
species identification, severity of
entanglement, etc., and take
photographs of the whale, if possible,
regardless of the species of whale or
whether the whale is alive or dead,
during its stand-by status and after
terminating its stand-by status. The
stand-by vessel must remain on scene
until the USCG or an authorized
response team arrives, or the vessel is
informed that an authorized response
team will not arrive. If the vessel
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receives notice that a response team is
not available, the vessel may
discontinue standing-by the entangled
whale and continue fishing operations;
and
(iv) To receive credit for standing by
an entangled whale, a vessel must
submit a written request to the Regional
Administrator. This request must
include at least the following
information: Date and time when the
vessel began its stand-by status; date of
first communication with the USCG;
and date and time when the vessel
terminated its stand-by status. DAS
credit shall not be granted for the time
a vessel fishes when standing by an
entangled whale. Upon a review of the
request, NMFS shall consider granting
the DAS credit based on information
available at the time of the request,
regardless of whether an authorized
response team arrives on scene or a
rescue is attempted. NMFS shall notify
the permit holder of any DAS
adjustment that is made or explain the
reasons why an adjustment will not be
made.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 648.87, add paragraph (e) to
read as follows:
§ 648.87
Sector allocation.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) State-operated permit bank. A
state-operated permit bank must meet
and is subject to the following
requirements and conditions:
(1) The state-operated permit bank
must be initially established using a
Federal grant award from NOAA
through a valid Memorandum of
Agreement (MOA) with NMFS and the
state must maintain and comply with
such MOA. The MOA must contain and
the state must comply with at least the
following requirements and conditions:
(i) The state may not associate a stateoperated permit bank permit with a
vessel engaged in any fishing or other
on-the-water activities;
(ii) The state must establish the
minimum eligibility criteria to
determine whether a sector and its
associated vessels are qualified to
receive either ACE or DAS from the
state-operated permit bank;
(iii) The state must identify a program
contact person for the state agency
administering the state-operated permit
bank;
(iv) The state must provide to NMFS
a list of all permits held by the state
under the aegis of the state-operated
permit bank, and declare which permits
will be used in the coming fishing year
for exclusively DAS leasing to common
pool vessels and which permits are to be
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16947
used exclusively for transferring ACE to
sectors (including the leasing of DAS to
sector vessels for the purpose of
complying with the requirements of
other FMPs); and
(v) The state must prepare and submit
an annual performance report to NMFS,
and that said performance report must
include, at a minimum, the following
elements:
(A) A comprehensive listing of all
permits held by the state-operated
permit bank, identifying whether a
permit was used for ACE transfers to
sectors (including DAS leases to the
sector members) or DAS leases to
common pool vessels, the total amount
of ACE, by stock, and DAS available to
the state-operated permit bank for
transfers and leases to sectors and
common-pool vessels;
(B) A comprehensive listing of all
sectors to which ACE was transferred
from the state-operated permit bank,
including the amount, by stock, of ACE
transferred to each sector, including a
list of all vessels that harvested the ACE
transferred to the sector and the
amounts harvested;
(C) A comprehensive listing of all
sector vessels to which DAS were leased
from the state-operated permit bank,
including the number of DAS leased to
each sector vessel; and
(D) A comprehensive listing of all
common pool vessels to which DAS
were leased from the state-operated
permit bank, including the number of
DAS leased to each common pool
vessel.
(2) Eligibility. If a state is issued a
permit that meets sector eligibility
requirements, as defined in paragraph
(a)(3) of this section, such permit may
be held by a state-operated permit bank.
(3) Allocation and utilization of
ACE—(i) Allocation of ACE. The
amount of ACE allocated to a stateoperated permit bank shall be derived
from the permits appropriately declared
by the state to be ‘‘ACE permits,’’
pursuant to paragraph (e)(1)(i)(v) of this
section, for the fishing year and
allocated on a stock-by-stock basis
pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this
section.
(ii) Acquiring ACE. Except as
provided in this paragraph, a stateoperated permit bank may not acquire
ACE for a fishing year through a transfer
from a sector. If ACE is transferred to a
sector from a state-operated permit
bank, NMFS may authorize the return of
the unused portion of such ACE (up to
the total originally transferred) to the
state-operated permit bank upon written
agreement by both parties. The stateoperated permit bank may then
redistribute the available ACE to
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another qualifying sector during that
fishing year.
(iii) Transferring ACE. Subject to the
terms and conditions of the stateoperated permit bank’s MOAs with
NMFS, as well as ACE transfer
restrictions described in paragraph
(b)(1)(viii) of this section, a stateoperated permit bank may transfer ACE,
on a stock-by-stock basis, to other stateoperated permit banks.
(4) Allocation and utilization of daysat-sea—(i) Allocation of DAS. The
number of DAS available for a stateoperated permit bank to provide to
sector or common pool vessels shall be
the accumulated NE Multispecies
Category A DAS assigned to the fishing
vessel permits held by the state and
appropriately declared by the state
pursuant to paragraph (e)(1)(v) of this
section to be either ‘‘ACE permits’’ or
‘‘common pool permits’’ for that fishing
year, consistent with the terms of the
state’s permit bank MOA.
(ii) Acquiring DAS. A state-operated
permit bank may not acquire DAS
through a lease from a vessel permit
(including permits held by other stateoperated permit banks), as described in
§ 684.82(k). If a vessel leases DAS from
a state-operated permit bank, NMFS
may authorize the return of the unused
portion of such DAS to the stateoperated permit bank upon written
agreement by both parties, provided
none of the DAS had been used. The
state-operated permit bank may then
redistribute the available DAS to
another vessel during the same fishing
year.
(5) Annual report. A state-operated
permit bank shall report to the Council
annually on the performance of the
state-operated permit bank. Such reports
shall include at a minimum and to the
extent that the information does not
conflict with any regulations regarding
the protection of personal and/or
proprietary information, all elements
listed in paragraph (e)(1)(v) of this
section.
(6) Use of additional funds. If
additional funds from any source
become available to a state-operated
permit bank, the state-operated permit
bank may not allocate or transfer any
ACE that may be associated with any
new permit purchased with those funds,
until the state-operated permit bank
provides the Council the opportunity to
review the implications of the expanded
state-operated permit bank to the goals
and objectives of the NE Multispecies
FMP.
(7) Violation of the terms and
conditions applicable to a stateoperated permit bank. If a state or stateoperated permit bank violates or fails to
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comply with any of the requirements
and conditions specified in this section
or in the MOA referenced in paragraph
(e)(1) of this section, the state or stateoperated permit bank is subject to the
actions and penalties specified in
§ 648.4(n) or the MOA.
■ 6. In § 648.90, revise paragraph
(a)(2)(iii) to read as follows:
§ 648.90 NE multispecies assessment,
framework procedures and specifications,
and flexible area action system.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Based on this review, the PDT
shall recommend ACLs and develop
options necessary to achieve the FMP
goals and objectives, which may include
a preferred option. The PDT must
demonstrate through analyses and
documentation that the options they
develop are expected to meet the FMP
goals and objectives. The PDT may
review the performance of different user
groups or fleet sectors in developing
options. The range of options developed
by the PDT may include any of the
management measures in the FMP,
including, but not limited to: ACLs,
which must be based on the projected
fishing mortality levels required to meet
the goals and objectives outlined in the
FMP for the 12 regulated species and
ocean pout if able to be determined;
identifying and distributing ACLs and
other sub-components of the ACLs
among various segments of the fishery;
AMs; DAS changes; possession limits;
gear restrictions; closed areas;
permitting restrictions; minimum fish
sizes; recreational fishing measures;
describing and identifying EFH; fishing
gear management measures to protect
EFH; and designating habitat areas of
particular concern within EFH. In
addition, the following conditions and
measures may be adjusted through
future framework adjustments:
Revisions to DAS measures, including
DAS allocations (such as the
distribution of DAS among the four
categories of DAS), future uses for
Category C DAS, and DAS baselines,
adjustments for steaming time, etc.;
modifications to capacity measures,
such as changes to the DAS transfer or
DAS leasing measures; calculation of
area-specific ACLs, area management
boundaries, and adoption of areaspecific management measures; sector
allocation requirements and
specifications, including the
establishment of a new sector, the
disapproval of an existing sector, the
allowable percent of ACL available to a
sector through a sector allocation, and
the calculation of PSCs; sector
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administration provisions, including atsea and dockside monitoring measures;
sector reporting requirements; stateoperated permit bank administrative
provisions; measures to implement the
U.S./Canada Resource Sharing
Understanding, including any specified
TACs (hard or target); changes to
administrative measures; additional
uses for Regular B DAS; reporting
requirements; the GOM Inshore
Conservation and Management
Stewardship Plan; adjustments to the
Handgear A or B permits; gear
requirements to improve selectivity,
reduce bycatch, and/or reduce impacts
of the fishery on EFH; SAP
modifications; revisions to the ABC
control rule and status determination
criteria, including, but not limited to,
changes in the target fishing mortality
rates, minimum biomass thresholds,
numerical estimates of parameter
values, and the use of a proxy for
biomass may be made either through a
biennial adjustment or framework
adjustment; and any other measures
currently included in the FMP.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. In § 648.92, revise paragraph (b)(4)
to read as follows:
§ 648.92 Effort-control program for
monkfish limited access vessels.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(4) DAS credits—(i) Good Samaritan
credit. A limited access vessels fishing
under the DAS program and that spends
time at sea assisting in a USCG search
and rescue operation or assisting the
USCG in towing a disabled vessel, and
that can document the occurrence
through the USCG, will not accrue DAS
for the time documented.
(ii) Canceled trip DAS credit. A
limited access vessel operating under
the DAS program and that end a fishing
trip prior to setting and/or hauling
fishing gear for any reason may request
a cancelled trip DAS credit for the trip
based on the following conditions and
requirements.
(A) There is no fish onboard the
vessel and no fishing operations on the
vessel were initiated, including setting
and/or hauling fishing gear; and
(B) The owner or operator of the
vessel fishing under a DAS program and
required to use a VMS as specified
under § 648.10(b) makes an initial trip
cancelation notification from sea, at the
time the trip was canceled, or at the
earliest opportunity prior to crossing the
demarcation line as defined at
§ 648.10(a). These reports are in the
form of an email to NMFS Office of Law
Enforcement and include at least the
following information: Operator name;
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vessel name; vessel permit number; port
where vessel will return; date trip
started; estimated date/time of return to
port; and a statement from the operator
that no fish were onboard and no fishing
activity occurred; and
(C) The owner or operator of the
vessel operating under the DAS program
required to use the IVR call in as
specified under § 648.10(h) makes an
initial trip cancelation notification to
NMFS by calling the IVR back at the
time the trip was canceled, or at the
earliest opportunity prior to returning to
port. This request must include at least
the following information: Operator
name; vessel name; vessel permit
number; port where vessel will return;
date trip started; estimated date/time of
return to port; and a statement from the
operator that no fish were onboard and
no fishing activity occurred; and
(D) The owner or operator of the
vessel requesting a canceled trip DAS
credit, in addition to the requirements
in paragraphs (b)(4)(ii)(B) and (C) of this
section, submits a written DAS credit
request form to NMFS within 30 days of
the vessel’s return to port from the
canceled trip. This application must
include at least the following
information: Date and time when the
vessel canceled the fishing trip; date
and time of trip departure and landing;
operator name; owner/corporation
name; permit number; hull
identification number; vessel name; date
and time notification requirements
specified under paragraphs (b)(4)(ii)(B)
and (C) of this section were made;
reason for canceling the trip; and
owner/operator signature and date; and
(E) The vessel trip report for the
canceled trip as required under
§ 648.7(b) is submitted along with the
DAS credit request form; and
(F) For DAS credits that are requested
near the end of the fishing year as
defined at § 648.2, and approved by the
Regional Administrator, the credited
DAS apply to the fishing year in which
the canceled trip occurred. Credited
DAS that remain unused at the end of
the fishing year or are not credited until
the following fishing year and may be
carried over into the next fishing year,
not to exceed the maximum number of
carryover DAS as specified under
paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
[FR Doc. 2012–7062 Filed 3–22–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 111207737–2141–02]
RIN 0648–XB112
Pacific Cod by Catcher Vessels
Greater Than or Equal to 50 Feet (15.2
Meters) Length Overall Using Hookand-Line Gear in the Central
Regulatory Area of the Gulf of Alaska
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
AGENCY:
NMFS is prohibiting directed
fishing for Pacific cod by catcher vessels
(CVs) greater than or equal to 50 feet
(15.2 meters (m)) in length overall
(LOA) using hook-and-line gear in the
Central Regulatory Area of the Gulf of
Alaska (GOA). This action is necessary
to prevent exceeding the A season
allowance of the 2012 Pacific cod total
allowable catch apportioned to CVs
greater than or equal to 50 feet (15.2 m)
LOA using hook-and-line gear in the
Central Regulatory Area of the GOA.
DATES: Effective 1200 hrs, Alaska local
time (A.l.t.), March 20, 2012, through
1200 hrs, A.l.t., September 1, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Obren Davis, 907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS
manages the groundfish fishery in the
GOA exclusive economic zone
according to the Fishery Management
Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of
Alaska (FMP) prepared by the North
Pacific Fishery Management Council
under authority of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act. Regulations governing
fishing by U.S. vessels in accordance
with the FMP appear at subpart H of 50
CFR part 600 and 50 CFR part 679.
Regulations governing sideboard
protections for GOA groundfish
fisheries appear at subpart B of 50 CFR
part 680.
The A season allowance of the 2012
Pacific cod total allowable catch (TAC)
apportioned to CVs greater than or equal
to 50 feet (15.2 m) LOA using hook-andline gear in the Central Regulatory Area
of the GOA is 2,372 metric tons (mt), as
established by the final 2012 and 2013
harvest specifications for groundfish of
the GOA (77 FR 15194, March 14, 2012).
In accordance with § 679.20(d)(1)(i),
the Administrator, Alaska Region,
NMFS (Regional Administrator) has
SUMMARY:
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16949
determined that the A season allowance
of the 2012 Pacific cod TAC
apportioned to CVs greater than or equal
to 50 feet (15.2 m) LOA using hook-andline gear in the Central Regulatory Area
of the GOA will soon be reached.
Therefore, the Regional Administrator is
establishing a directed fishing
allowance of 2,272 mt, and is setting
aside the remaining 100 mt as bycatch
to support other anticipated groundfish
fisheries. In accordance with
§ 679.20(d)(1)(iii), the Regional
Administrator finds that this directed
fishing allowance has been reached.
Consequently, NMFS is prohibiting
directed fishing for Pacific cod by CVs
greater than or equal to 50 feet (15.2 m)
LOA using hook-and-line gear in the
Central Regulatory Area of the GOA.
After the effective date of this closure
the maximum retainable amounts at
§ 679.20(e) and (f) apply at any time
during a trip.
Classification
This action responds to the best
available information recently obtained
from the fishery. The Acting Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA
(AA), finds good cause to waive the
requirement to provide prior notice and
opportunity for public comment
pursuant to the authority set forth at 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B) as such requirement is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest. This requirement is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest as it would prevent NMFS from
responding to the most recent fisheries
data in a timely fashion and would
delay the closure of directed fishing for
Pacific cod for CVs greater than or equal
to 50 feet (15.2 m) LOA using hook-andline gear in the Central Regulatory Area
of the GOA. NMFS was unable to
publish a notice providing time for
public comment because the most
recent, relevant data only became
available as of March 19, 2012.
The AA also finds good cause to
waive the 30-day delay in the effective
date of this action under 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3). This finding is based upon
the reasons provided above for waiver of
prior notice and opportunity for public
comment.
This action is required by § 679.20
and is exempt from review under
Executive Order 12866.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: March 20, 2012.
Steven Thur,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2012–7043 Filed 3–20–12; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\23MRR1.SGM
23MRR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 57 (Friday, March 23, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 16942-16949]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-7062]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 110901552-20494-02]
RIN 0648-BB34
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Northeast (NE)
Multispecies Fishery; Amendment 17
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule implements measures in Amendment 17 to the
Northeast Multispecies Fishery Management Plan which was approved on
March 8, 2012. This action amends the Northeast Multispecies Fishery
Management Plan to explicitly define and facilitate the effective
operation of state-operated permit banks. As proposed in Amendment 17,
state-operated permit banks may be allocated an annual catch
entitlement and specifically authorized to provide their annual catch
entitlement and/or days-at-sea to approved groundfish sectors to
enhance the fishing opportunities available to sector members. This
action also approves a provision allowing NMFS to issue a days-at-sea
credit to a vessel that cancels a fishing trip prior to setting or
hauling fishing gear.
DATES: This rule is effective April 23, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Amendment 17 document, including an
environmental assessment and a regulatory impact review, are available
from the Northeast Regional Office of the National Marine Fisheries
Service, 55 Great Republic Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930. This document
is also accessible via the Internet at https://www.nero.noaa.gov.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in this
final rule may be submitted to the Northeast Regional Office and by
email to OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov, or fax to (202) 395-7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: William Whitmore, Fishery Policy
Analyst, (978) 281-9182; fax: (978) 281-9135.
[[Page 16943]]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The final rule implementing Amendment 13 to the Northeast (NE)
Multispecies Fishery Management Plan (FMP) (69 FR 22906; April 27,
2004) specified a process for forming sectors within the NE
multispecies fishery, implemented restrictions applicable to all
sectors, and authorized the allocation of a total allowable catch (TAC)
for specific groundfish species to a sector. As approved in Amendment
13, each sector must prepare a sector operations plan, which must be
submitted to NMFS along with signed sector member contracts and an
environmental assessment (EA), or other appropriate environmental
analysis. Amendment 16 (74 FR 18262; April 9, 2010) expanded sector
management measures and authorized 17 new sectors, for a total of 19
sectors. The amendment defined a sector as ``[a] group of persons
(three or more persons, none of whom have an ownership interest in the
other two persons in the sector) holding limited access vessel permits
who have voluntarily entered into a contract and agree to certain
fishing restrictions for a specified period of time, and which has been
granted a TAC(s) [sic] in order to achieve objectives consistent with
applicable FMP goals and objectives.'' A sector's TAC is referred to as
an annual catch entitlement (ACE). Each sector's ACE for a particular
stock represents a share of that stock's annual catch limit (ACL)
available to commercial NE multispecies vessels, based upon the
potential sector contribution (PSC) of permits participating in that
sector. Regional Administrator (RA) approval is required for a sector
to be authorized to fish and to be allocated an ACE for stocks of
regulated NE multispecies during each fishing year. Each sector is
responsible for monitoring its catch, reporting catch to NMFS, and
ensuring it does not exceed its ACE.
In 2009 and 2010, NOAA provided nearly $5 million in funding
through Federal grants to the states of Maine, New Hampshire, and Rhode
Island for the express purpose of establishing several ``permit banks''
of NE multispecies fishing vessel permits.\1\ The permit banks were
developed jointly by the states and NMFS, through memoranda of
agreement (MOA), to help promote the effective implementation of catch
share programs in New England and to mitigate some of the potential
adverse socio-economic impacts to fishing communities and small-scale
fishing businesses. The intent of the permit bank program is for states
to use the funding to obtain fishing vessel permits and then to provide
the fishing opportunities associated with those permits in the form of
ACE and/or days-at-sea (DAS) to qualified fishermen.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ $1 million initially provided to the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts for a permit bank has been, at the request of the
Commonwealth, reprogrammed for use in a revolving loan fund intended
to serve a similar purpose as the permit bank.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
State-operated permit banks are not specifically recognized under
the current NE Multispecies FMP, and are not allocated, or authorized
to transfer, ACE outside of the current sector program. Because of
this, the only mechanism currently available for a state-operated
permit bank to be allocated and to transfer ACE is for the state to
either enroll in an existing sector or to form its own sector with
other permit holders. Both of these methods complicate the operation of
the state permit banks and add administrative requirements that are
redundant with requirements of memoranda of agreement (MOA) that were
signed with the states and NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service
(NMFS) as a prerequisite for receiving the grant awards.
This action implements Amendment 17 to the NE Multispecies FMP
which was approved on March 8, 2012. The amendment as implemented
explicitly defines and facilitates the effective operation of state-
operated permit banks by specifically recognizing state-operated permit
banks under the provisions of the NE Multispecies FMP. As such, a
state-operated permit bank can now be allocated ACE and is able to
transfer ACE to an approved sector without having to enroll in another
sector or create its own sector. Separately from Amendment 17, this
action also amends the regulations implementing the NE Multispecies,
Monkfish, and Atlantic Sea Scallop FMPs to include a provision that
would allow NMFS to issue a DAS credit to a vessel that canceled a
fishing trip prior to setting or hauling fishing gear and if the
vessel, therefore, did not catch or land fish at any time on the trip.
A notice of availability for Amendment 17 was published in the
Federal Register on December 12, 2011 (76 FR 77200) and public comments
were accepted through February 10, 2012. A proposed rule to implement
measures in Amendment 17 was published in the Federal Register on
December 22, 2011 (76 FR 79612) and public comments were accepted
through January 23, 2012. The Amendment 17 proposed rule included a
detailed description of sector management, state-operated permit banks,
the proposed measures, and other issues that influenced the development
of this action. Amendment 17 was approved on March 8, 2012.
Approved Measures
The following summarizes the approved Amendment 17 measures as well
as the DAS credit provision as previously proposed. These measures
build upon the provisions implemented by previous management actions
and are intended to either supplement or replace existing regulations
that would otherwise apply to state-operated permit banks. This final
rule also revises regulations that are not specifically identified in
Amendment 17, but are necessary to clarify existing provisions, as
described further below.
1. Definition of a State-Operated Permit Bank
Amendment 17 defines a state-operated permit bank as a permit
depository established through an agreement between NOAA and a state in
which Federal grant funds are used by the state to obtain Federal
fishing vessel permits so that the fishing access privileges associated
with those permits may be allocated by the state to qualified sectors.
State-operated permit banks are not equivalent to groundfish sectors.
State-operated permit banks shall be deemed to meet the definition
above, and therefore qualify to operate as intended in this action, so
long as the state-operated permit bank was initially established using
a Federal grant award from NOAA for this purpose and the state
maintains a valid MOA with NMFS. The MOA between NMFS and each state
establishes the parameters that the state must follow in order to
receive Federal grant funding that is then applied towards purchasing
NE multispecies permitted vessels and transferring the ACE allocated to
the permit bank to approved sectors. A state-operated permit bank must
have a valid MOA in order to operate. State-operated permit banks are
no longer subject to the requirement that three or more persons be
included in a sector.
2. Clarification and Streamlining of Administrative Procedures and
Requirements for State-Operated Permit Banks
This action allows state-operated permit banks to be allocated ACE
and/or DAS and authorizes them to provide ACE to approved groundfish
sectors to enhance the fishing opportunities available to sector
members. State-operated permit banks are required to
[[Page 16944]]
comply with the terms and conditions of any applicable Federal grant
agreement (i.e., a Federal grant award provided to a state for the
purpose of establishing, enhancing, or operating a permit bank), as
well as meet the requirements specified in an MOA established with NMFS
for administering the permit bank.
State-operated permit banks are required to report to the Council
annually on the performance of the permit bank. Such reports must
include, to the extent that the information does not conflict with any
regulations regarding the protection of personal and/or proprietary
information, all reporting requirements within the MOA. State-operated
permit banks are exempt from many of the sector reporting requirements
because state-operated permit banks are prohibited from actively
fishing.
State-operated permit banks are not authorized to acquire, except
as described below, additional ACE or DAS for a fishing year through a
transfer from a sector or other vessels because the purpose of the
state-operated permit banks is to transfer out ACE and DAS to sector
fishermen in need of additional allocation, not to accumulate ACE or
DAS. However, if a sector receives a transfer of ACE, or a vessel
receives DAS, from a state-operated permit bank but wishes to return
either the (unused) ACE or DAS to the permit bank, NMFS could, upon
written agreement by both parties, void the initial transfer, thereby
returning the ACE or DAS to the permit bank. The state permit bank
would then be free to redistribute the available ACE or DAS to another
sector or vessel. In addition, and subject to the terms and conditions
of the states' permit bank MOAs with NMFS, state-operated permit banks
are authorized to transfer ACE, on a stock-by-stock basis, to other
state-operated permit banks for the purpose of maximizing the fishing
opportunities made available by the permit banks to sector members. For
example, the Rhode Island state permit bank could transfer ACE for Gulf
of Maine cod to the Maine state permit bank in exchange for ACE for
Southern New England/Mid-Atlantic yellowtail flounder.
For the reasons stated in the proposed rule, NMFS highlighted the
need for public comment in the proposed rule on two specific provisions
of Amendment 17 raised by the New England Fishery Management Council,
detailed in the September 7, 2011, ``deeming'' letter to the Regional
Administrator.
First, NMFS specifically solicited public comment on whether state-
operated permit banks should be prohibited from using additional funds
to acquire permits prior to Council review. The State of New Hampshire
commented that it was ``not opposed'' to the proposed regulation as
written. However, NMFS has determined that the proposed rule is
inconsistent with Amendment 17 language and it is not appropriate in
the context of Amendment 17 for NMFS to prohibit the mere acquisition
of a permit that may or may not be used in the state-operated permit
bank. Moreover, there is nothing in the current regulations that
prohibits any interested party, including a state, from acquiring a
permit. Therefore, the Council cannot prohibit a state from acquiring a
permit with additional funding it receives or impose any conditions on
the acquisition of such a permit. If more funds become available to a
state, the use of those additional funds to allocate or transfer ACE by
a state-operated permit bank as defined in this action must first be
reviewed by the Council for consistency with the goals and objectives
of the NE Multispecies FMP prior to the state using those funds outside
of the sector process. A state would not be authorized to allocate or
transfer any ACE that may be associated with new permits obtained as a
result of the additional funds, unless the state either: (1) provides
the Council the opportunity to review the implications of the expanded
permit bank to the goals and objectives of the NE Multispecies FMP; or
(2) forms or joins an approved groundfish sector. This language is
consistent with the language in Amendment 17 as approved by the
Council. The regulations implemented by this rule have been changed
accordingly.
Second, NMFS sought public comment on whether state-operated permit
banks should be allowed to carry-over unused ACE and DAS from one
fishing year into the next. In deeming the proposed regulations
necessary and appropriate for implementing Amendment 17, the Council
questioned whether the carryover of unused ACE provision for sectors in
current regulations should be included in these implementing
regulations even though the amendment is silent on this issue. However,
the Council did not submit a comment on this issue. In the absence of
any comments on this issue, and because the amendment itself and
accompanying regulations do not propose carry-over provisions, NMFS
cannot unilaterally add such a provision to this final rule. Moreover,
NMFS summarized in the proposed rule that there are reasons distinct
from the sector process that explain why carry-over may not be
appropriate for state-operated permit banks. Therefore, state-operated
permit banks cannot carry-over uncaught ACE from one fishing year to
the next.
3. Canceled Trip DAS Credit
This final rule implements a provision that is separate from
Amendment 17, allowing NMFS to credit DAS to a vessel that cancels a
fishing trip prior to setting or hauling fishing gear and which,
therefore, does not catch or land fish at any time on the trip. This
provision applies to all fisheries that operate under a DAS management
system, specifically the NE multispecies, monkfish, and Atlantic sea
scallop fisheries. Because this DAS credit would only be granted for
situations in which no fishing activity occurs, it is not expected to
have a negative impact on fishing-related mortality in the DAS
fisheries. This measure will be applied retroactively for the 2011
fishing years for those fisheries (the fishing years are not the same).
To ensure the enforceability of this provision, vessels seeking a
DAS credit must notify NMFS' Office of Law Enforcement (OLE) to
coordinate a monitored landing event. Vessels that are required to use
a vessel monitoring system (VMS) must send a VMS email to OLE at the
earliest opportunity prior to crossing the VMS demarcation line upon
return to port. Vessels not required to use a VMS must use the
interactive voice response (IVR) line to make the notification.
Additionally, both VMS and IVR vessels must submit a written DAS credit
form along with the vessel trip report for the canceled trip to NMFS.
The following information must be submitted on the written DAS
credit request form: Owner/corporation name; vessel name; permit
number; U.S. Coast Guard documentation number or state registration
number; vessel operator name; trip departure and landing date; date and
time VMS email was sent or IVR backup line was called; and reason for
canceling the trip. Forms must be submitted within 30 days from the day
the vessel returned to port on the canceled trip.
For DAS credits that are requested near the end of the fishing
year, the credited DAS will apply to the year in which the canceled
trip occurred. Credited DAS that remain unused at the end of the
fishing year or are not credited until the following fishing year can
be carried over into the next fishing year, provided they do not to
exceed the maximum number of DAS allowed to be
[[Page 16945]]
carried over for the fishery being credited.
Comments and Responses
Three comments were received on the proposed rule. Two comments,
one from the State of New Hampshire, and one from a member of the
public, expressed general support for the amendment. One comment from a
member of the fishing industry expressed concern about common pool
vessels being excluded from state-operated permit bank ACE.
Comment 1: The State of New Hampshire did not oppose the Council
reviewing plans by its state-operated permit bank prior to acquiring
additional Federal fishing permits.
Response: NMFS has determined that the proposed regulation for this
provision is not consistent with Amendment 17 and it is not appropriate
for NMFS to prohibit the mere acquisition of a permit by a state in the
context of Amendment 17. In addition, nothing in the current
regulations for this provision prohibits any interested party,
including a state-operated permit bank, from acquiring a permit.
Therefore, this rule does not prohibit a state from acquiring a permit
or impose conditions on a state regarding such an acquisition. Rather,
this rule provides that if more funds from any source become available
to a state to obtain additional permits, the state-operated permit bank
may not allocate or transfer ACE that may be associated with the new
permit until the state-operated permit bank provides the Council with
the opportunity to review the implications of the expanded permit bank
with the goals and objectives of the NE Multispecies FMP. However, once
the Council has the opportunity to conduct such a review, the state-
operated permit bank may allocate or transfer any such ACE provided it
is consistent with the MOAs with NOAA and other applicable law.
Comment 2: The State of New Hampshire was not opposed to allowing
DAS credit to vessels cancelling fishing trips prior to engaging in
fishing activity for fisheries managed under a DAS system.
Response: NMFS agrees with this comment and has approved this
measure in this action.
Comment 3: One individual expressed concern that fishermen not
enrolled in a sector (i.e., the common pool) are unable to acquire ACE
from state-operated permit banks.
Response: Prior to Amendment 17, the only entities able to transfer
ACE were approved sectors. Amendment 17 allows a state-operated permit
bank to transfer ACE and/or DAS to another sector without becoming or
enrolling in a sector. Neither sectors nor state-operated permit banks
are able to transfer ACE to an individual not enrolled in a sector.
However, common pool vessels may lease DAS from a state-operated permit
bank for cooperative research purposes. Allowing a permit bank to
transfer ACE to an individual fisherman in the common pool is
inconsistent with current regulations and the FMP and therefore
prohibited. Moreover, because this type of transfer regarding sectors
was not proposed in Amendment 17, NMFS may not unilaterally add it.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
As described above, NMFS has determined that the proposed rule is
inconsistent with Amendment 17 language, and that it is not appropriate
in the context of Amendment 17 for NMFS to prohibit the mere
acquisition of a permit that may or may not be used in the state-
operated permit bank. Therefore, the regulation at 50 CFR 648.87(e)(6)
has been modified in this final rule to be consistent with the language
in Amendment 17 as approved by the Council.
Classification
The Administrator, Northeast Region, NMFS, determined that
Amendment 17 to the NE Multispecies FMP is necessary for the
conservation and management of the groundfish fishery and that it is
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act and other applicable laws.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the
Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce certified to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration
during the proposed rule stage that this action would not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The factual basis for the certification was published in the proposed
rule and is not repeated here. No comments were received regarding this
certification. As a result, a regulatory flexibility analysis was not
required and none was prepared.
This final rule contains a collection-of-information requirement
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and that has been
submitted for approval by OMB under control numbers 0648-0202 and 0648-
1212. NMFS will notify the affected public through a follow-up notice
in the Federal Register announcing OMB's clearance of the collection-
of-information requirements. Under this action, in order to request a
DAS credit, vessel owners are required to provide NMFS with an initial
notification as well as the submission of a DAS credit request form.
The public burden for requesting a DAS credit is estimated to average
15 minutes per application, including the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the
collection information. Send comments regarding these burden estimates
or any other aspect of this data collection, including suggestions for
reducing the burden, to NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and by email to OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov, or fax to 202-395-7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is
required to respond to, and no person shall be subject to penalty for
failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the
requirements of the PRA, unless that collection of information displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 648
Fish, Fisheries, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: March 19, 2012.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Acting Assistant Administrator, For Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 648 is amended
as follows:
PART 648--FISHERIES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
0
1. The authority citation for part 648 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 648.2, revise the definition for ``Annual catch entitlement
(ACE)'' and add a new definition for ``State-operated permit bank'' in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 648.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Annual catch entitlement (ACE), with respect to the NE multispecies
fishery, means the share of the annual catch limit (ACL) for each NE
multispecies stock that is allocated to an individual sector or state-
operated permit bank based upon the cumulative fishing history attached
to each permit participating in that sector or held by a state-operated
permit bank in a given year. This share may be adjusted due to
penalties for exceeding the sector's ACE for a particular stock in
earlier years, or due to other violations of the FMP,
[[Page 16946]]
including the yearly sector operations plan. When a sector's or state-
operated permit bank's share of a NE multispecies stock, as determined
by the fishing histories of vessels participating in that sector or
permits held by a state-operated permit bank, is multiplied by the
available catch, the result is the amount of ACE (live weight in
pounds) that can be harvested (landings and discards) by participants
in that sector or transferred by a state-operated permit bank, during a
particular fishing year.
* * * * *
State-operated permit bank means a depository established and
operated by a state through an agreement between NMFS and a state in
which Federal grant funds have been used by the state to obtain Federal
fishing vessel permits so that the fishing access privileges associated
with those permits may be allocated to qualified persons and that meets
the requirement of Sec. 648.87(e).
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 648.53, revise paragraph (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 648.53 Acceptable biological catch (ABC), annual catch limits
(ACL), annual catch targets (ACT), DAS allocations, and individual
fishing quotas (IFQ).
* * * * *
(f) DAS credits--(1) Good Samaritan credit. A limited access vessel
operating under the DAS program and that spends time at sea assisting
in a USCG search and rescue operation or assisting the USCG in towing a
disabled vessel, and that can document the occurrence through the USCG,
will not accrue DAS for the time documented.
(2) Canceled trip DAS credit. A limited access vessel operating
under the DAS program and that ends a fishing trip prior to setting
and/or hauling fishing gear for any reason may request a cancelled trip
DAS credit for the trip based on the following conditions and
requirements:
(i) There is no fish onboard the vessel and no fishing operations
on the vessel were initiated, including setting and/or hauling fishing
gear; and
(ii) The owner or operator of the vessel fishing under a DAS
program and required to use a VMS as specified under Sec. 648.10(b)
makes an initial trip cancelation notification from sea, at the time
the trip was canceled, or at the earliest opportunity prior to crossing
the demarcation line as defined at Sec. 648.10(a). These reports are
in the form of an email to NMFS Office of Law Enforcement and include
at least the following information: Operator name; vessel name; vessel
permit number; port where vessel will return; date trip started;
estimated date/time of return to port; and a statement by the operator
that no fish were onboard and no fishing activity occurred; and
(iii) The owner or operator of the vessel operating under the DAS
program required to use the IVR call in as specified under Sec.
648.10(h) makes an initial trip cancelation notification to NMFS by
calling the IVR back at the time the trip was canceled, or at the
earliest opportunity prior to returning to port. This request must
include at least the following information: Operator name; vessel name;
vessel permit number; port where vessel will return; date trip started;
estimated date/time of return to port; and a statement from the
operator that no fish were onboard and no fishing activity occurred;
and
(iv) The owner or operator of the vessel requesting a canceled trip
DAS credit, in addition to the requirements in paragraphs (f)(2)(ii)
and (iii) of this section, submits a written DAS credit request form to
NMFS within 30 days of the vessel's return to port from the canceled
trip. This application must include at least the following information:
Date and time when the vessel canceled the fishing trip; date and time
of trip departure and landing; operator name; owner/corporation name;
permit number; hull identification number; vessel name; date and time
notification requirements specified under paragraphs (f)(2)(ii) and
(iii) of this section were made; reason for canceling the trip; and
owner/operator signature and date; and
(v) The vessel trip report for the canceled trip as required under
Sec. 648.7(b) is submitted along with the DAS credit request form; and
(vi) For DAS credits that are requested near the end of the fishing
year as defined at Sec. 648.2, and approved by the Regional
Administrator, the credited DAS apply to the fishing year in which the
canceled trip occurred. Credited DAS that remain unused at the end of
the fishing year or that are not credited until the following fishing
year may be carried over into the next fishing year, not to exceed the
maximum number of carryover DAS as specified under paragraph (d) of
this section.
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 648.82, remove and reserve paragraph (m) and revise
paragraph (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 648.82 Effort-control program for NE multispecies limited access
vessels.
* * * * *
(f) DAS credits--(1) Good Samaritan credit. A limited access vessel
fishing under the DAS program and that spends time at sea assisting in
a USCG search and rescue operation or assisting the USCG in towing a
disabled vessel, and that can document the occurrence through the USCG,
shall not accrue DAS for the time documented.
(2) Canceled trip DAS credit. A limited access vessel operating
under the DAS program and that ends a fishing trip prior to setting
and/or hauling fishing gear for any reason may request a cancelled trip
DAS credit for the trip based on the following conditions and
requirements:
(i) There is no fish onboard the vessel and no fishing operations
on the vessel were initiated, including setting and/or hauling fishing
gear; and
(ii) The owner or operator of the vessel fishing under a DAS
program and required to use a VMS as specified under Sec. 648.10(b)
makes an initial trip cancelation notification from sea, at the time
the trip was canceled, or at the earliest opportunity prior to crossing
the demarcation line as defined at Sec. 648.10(a). These reports are
in the form of an email to NMFS Office of Law Enforcement and include
at least the following information: Operator name; vessel name; vessel
permit number; port where vessel will return; date trip started;
estimated date/time of return to port; and a statement from the
operator must that no fish were onboard and no fishing activity
occurred; and
(iii) The owner or operator of the vessel operating under the DAS
program required to use the IVR call in as specified under Sec.
648.10(h) makes an initial trip cancelation notification to NMFS by
calling the IVR back at the time the trip was canceled, or at the
earliest opportunity prior to returning to port. This request must
include at least the following information: Operator name; vessel name;
vessel permit number; port where vessel will return; date trip started;
estimated date/time of return to port; and a statement from the
operator that no fish were onboard and no fishing activity occurred;
and
(iv) The owner or operator of the vessel requesting a canceled trip
DAS credit, in addition to the requirements in paragraphs (f)(2)(ii)
and (iii) of this section, submits a written DAS credit request form to
NMFS within 30 days of the vessel's return to port from the canceled
trip. This application must include at least the following information:
Date and time when the vessel canceled the fishing trip; date and time
of trip departure and landing; operator name; owner/corporation name;
permit number; hull identification number; vessel name; date and time
notification requirements specified under paragraphs (f)(2)(ii) and
(iii) of this section were made; reason
[[Page 16947]]
for canceling the trip; and owner/operator signature and date; and
(v) The vessel trip report for the canceled trip as required under
Sec. 648.7(b) is submitted along with the DAS credit request form; and
(vi) For DAS credits that are requested near the end of the fishing
year as defined at Sec. 648.2, and approved by the Regional
Administrator, the credited DAS apply to the fishing year in which the
canceled trip occurred. Credited DAS that remain unused at the end of
the fishing year or are not credited until the following fishing year
may be carried over into the next fishing year, not to exceed the
maximum number of carryover DAS as specified under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section.
(3) DAS credit for standing by entangled whales. A limited access
vessel fishing under the DAS program that reports and stands by an
entangled whale may request a DAS credit for the time spent standing by
the whale. The following conditions and requirements must be met to
receive this credit:
(i) At the time the vessel begins standing by the entangled whale,
the vessel operator must notify the USCG and the Center for Coastal
Studies, or another organization authorized by the Regional
Administrator, of the location of the entangled whale and that the
vessel is going to stand by the entangled whale until the arrival of an
authorized response team;
(ii) Only one vessel at a time may receive credit for standing by
an entangled whale. A vessel standing by an entangled whale may
transfer its stand-by status to another vessel while waiting for an
authorized response team to arrive, provided it notifies the USCG and
the Center for Coastal Studies, or another organization authorized by
the Regional Administrator, of the transfer. The vessel to which stand-
by status is transferred must also notify the USCG and the Center for
Coastal Studies or another organization authorized by the Regional
Administrator of this transfer and comply with the conditions and
restrictions of this part;
(iii) The stand-by vessel must be available to answer questions on
the condition of the animal, possible species identification, severity
of entanglement, etc., and take photographs of the whale, if possible,
regardless of the species of whale or whether the whale is alive or
dead, during its stand-by status and after terminating its stand-by
status. The stand-by vessel must remain on scene until the USCG or an
authorized response team arrives, or the vessel is informed that an
authorized response team will not arrive. If the vessel receives notice
that a response team is not available, the vessel may discontinue
standing-by the entangled whale and continue fishing operations; and
(iv) To receive credit for standing by an entangled whale, a vessel
must submit a written request to the Regional Administrator. This
request must include at least the following information: Date and time
when the vessel began its stand-by status; date of first communication
with the USCG; and date and time when the vessel terminated its stand-
by status. DAS credit shall not be granted for the time a vessel fishes
when standing by an entangled whale. Upon a review of the request, NMFS
shall consider granting the DAS credit based on information available
at the time of the request, regardless of whether an authorized
response team arrives on scene or a rescue is attempted. NMFS shall
notify the permit holder of any DAS adjustment that is made or explain
the reasons why an adjustment will not be made.
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 648.87, add paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 648.87 Sector allocation.
* * * * *
(e) State-operated permit bank. A state-operated permit bank must
meet and is subject to the following requirements and conditions:
(1) The state-operated permit bank must be initially established
using a Federal grant award from NOAA through a valid Memorandum of
Agreement (MOA) with NMFS and the state must maintain and comply with
such MOA. The MOA must contain and the state must comply with at least
the following requirements and conditions:
(i) The state may not associate a state-operated permit bank permit
with a vessel engaged in any fishing or other on-the-water activities;
(ii) The state must establish the minimum eligibility criteria to
determine whether a sector and its associated vessels are qualified to
receive either ACE or DAS from the state-operated permit bank;
(iii) The state must identify a program contact person for the
state agency administering the state-operated permit bank;
(iv) The state must provide to NMFS a list of all permits held by
the state under the aegis of the state-operated permit bank, and
declare which permits will be used in the coming fishing year for
exclusively DAS leasing to common pool vessels and which permits are to
be used exclusively for transferring ACE to sectors (including the
leasing of DAS to sector vessels for the purpose of complying with the
requirements of other FMPs); and
(v) The state must prepare and submit an annual performance report
to NMFS, and that said performance report must include, at a minimum,
the following elements:
(A) A comprehensive listing of all permits held by the state-
operated permit bank, identifying whether a permit was used for ACE
transfers to sectors (including DAS leases to the sector members) or
DAS leases to common pool vessels, the total amount of ACE, by stock,
and DAS available to the state-operated permit bank for transfers and
leases to sectors and common-pool vessels;
(B) A comprehensive listing of all sectors to which ACE was
transferred from the state-operated permit bank, including the amount,
by stock, of ACE transferred to each sector, including a list of all
vessels that harvested the ACE transferred to the sector and the
amounts harvested;
(C) A comprehensive listing of all sector vessels to which DAS were
leased from the state-operated permit bank, including the number of DAS
leased to each sector vessel; and
(D) A comprehensive listing of all common pool vessels to which DAS
were leased from the state-operated permit bank, including the number
of DAS leased to each common pool vessel.
(2) Eligibility. If a state is issued a permit that meets sector
eligibility requirements, as defined in paragraph (a)(3) of this
section, such permit may be held by a state-operated permit bank.
(3) Allocation and utilization of ACE--(i) Allocation of ACE. The
amount of ACE allocated to a state-operated permit bank shall be
derived from the permits appropriately declared by the state to be
``ACE permits,'' pursuant to paragraph (e)(1)(i)(v) of this section,
for the fishing year and allocated on a stock-by-stock basis pursuant
to paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section.
(ii) Acquiring ACE. Except as provided in this paragraph, a state-
operated permit bank may not acquire ACE for a fishing year through a
transfer from a sector. If ACE is transferred to a sector from a state-
operated permit bank, NMFS may authorize the return of the unused
portion of such ACE (up to the total originally transferred) to the
state-operated permit bank upon written agreement by both parties. The
state-operated permit bank may then redistribute the available ACE to
[[Page 16948]]
another qualifying sector during that fishing year.
(iii) Transferring ACE. Subject to the terms and conditions of the
state-operated permit bank's MOAs with NMFS, as well as ACE transfer
restrictions described in paragraph (b)(1)(viii) of this section, a
state-operated permit bank may transfer ACE, on a stock-by-stock basis,
to other state-operated permit banks.
(4) Allocation and utilization of days-at-sea--(i) Allocation of
DAS. The number of DAS available for a state-operated permit bank to
provide to sector or common pool vessels shall be the accumulated NE
Multispecies Category A DAS assigned to the fishing vessel permits held
by the state and appropriately declared by the state pursuant to
paragraph (e)(1)(v) of this section to be either ``ACE permits'' or
``common pool permits'' for that fishing year, consistent with the
terms of the state's permit bank MOA.
(ii) Acquiring DAS. A state-operated permit bank may not acquire
DAS through a lease from a vessel permit (including permits held by
other state-operated permit banks), as described in Sec. 684.82(k). If
a vessel leases DAS from a state-operated permit bank, NMFS may
authorize the return of the unused portion of such DAS to the state-
operated permit bank upon written agreement by both parties, provided
none of the DAS had been used. The state-operated permit bank may then
redistribute the available DAS to another vessel during the same
fishing year.
(5) Annual report. A state-operated permit bank shall report to the
Council annually on the performance of the state-operated permit bank.
Such reports shall include at a minimum and to the extent that the
information does not conflict with any regulations regarding the
protection of personal and/or proprietary information, all elements
listed in paragraph (e)(1)(v) of this section.
(6) Use of additional funds. If additional funds from any source
become available to a state-operated permit bank, the state-operated
permit bank may not allocate or transfer any ACE that may be associated
with any new permit purchased with those funds, until the state-
operated permit bank provides the Council the opportunity to review the
implications of the expanded state-operated permit bank to the goals
and objectives of the NE Multispecies FMP.
(7) Violation of the terms and conditions applicable to a state-
operated permit bank. If a state or state-operated permit bank violates
or fails to comply with any of the requirements and conditions
specified in this section or in the MOA referenced in paragraph (e)(1)
of this section, the state or state-operated permit bank is subject to
the actions and penalties specified in Sec. 648.4(n) or the MOA.
0
6. In Sec. 648.90, revise paragraph (a)(2)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 648.90 NE multispecies assessment, framework procedures and
specifications, and flexible area action system.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Based on this review, the PDT shall recommend ACLs and
develop options necessary to achieve the FMP goals and objectives,
which may include a preferred option. The PDT must demonstrate through
analyses and documentation that the options they develop are expected
to meet the FMP goals and objectives. The PDT may review the
performance of different user groups or fleet sectors in developing
options. The range of options developed by the PDT may include any of
the management measures in the FMP, including, but not limited to:
ACLs, which must be based on the projected fishing mortality levels
required to meet the goals and objectives outlined in the FMP for the
12 regulated species and ocean pout if able to be determined;
identifying and distributing ACLs and other sub-components of the ACLs
among various segments of the fishery; AMs; DAS changes; possession
limits; gear restrictions; closed areas; permitting restrictions;
minimum fish sizes; recreational fishing measures; describing and
identifying EFH; fishing gear management measures to protect EFH; and
designating habitat areas of particular concern within EFH. In
addition, the following conditions and measures may be adjusted through
future framework adjustments: Revisions to DAS measures, including DAS
allocations (such as the distribution of DAS among the four categories
of DAS), future uses for Category C DAS, and DAS baselines, adjustments
for steaming time, etc.; modifications to capacity measures, such as
changes to the DAS transfer or DAS leasing measures; calculation of
area-specific ACLs, area management boundaries, and adoption of area-
specific management measures; sector allocation requirements and
specifications, including the establishment of a new sector, the
disapproval of an existing sector, the allowable percent of ACL
available to a sector through a sector allocation, and the calculation
of PSCs; sector administration provisions, including at-sea and
dockside monitoring measures; sector reporting requirements; state-
operated permit bank administrative provisions; measures to implement
the U.S./Canada Resource Sharing Understanding, including any specified
TACs (hard or target); changes to administrative measures; additional
uses for Regular B DAS; reporting requirements; the GOM Inshore
Conservation and Management Stewardship Plan; adjustments to the
Handgear A or B permits; gear requirements to improve selectivity,
reduce bycatch, and/or reduce impacts of the fishery on EFH; SAP
modifications; revisions to the ABC control rule and status
determination criteria, including, but not limited to, changes in the
target fishing mortality rates, minimum biomass thresholds, numerical
estimates of parameter values, and the use of a proxy for biomass may
be made either through a biennial adjustment or framework adjustment;
and any other measures currently included in the FMP.
* * * * *
0
7. In Sec. 648.92, revise paragraph (b)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 648.92 Effort-control program for monkfish limited access
vessels.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(4) DAS credits--(i) Good Samaritan credit. A limited access
vessels fishing under the DAS program and that spends time at sea
assisting in a USCG search and rescue operation or assisting the USCG
in towing a disabled vessel, and that can document the occurrence
through the USCG, will not accrue DAS for the time documented.
(ii) Canceled trip DAS credit. A limited access vessel operating
under the DAS program and that end a fishing trip prior to setting and/
or hauling fishing gear for any reason may request a cancelled trip DAS
credit for the trip based on the following conditions and requirements.
(A) There is no fish onboard the vessel and no fishing operations
on the vessel were initiated, including setting and/or hauling fishing
gear; and
(B) The owner or operator of the vessel fishing under a DAS program
and required to use a VMS as specified under Sec. 648.10(b) makes an
initial trip cancelation notification from sea, at the time the trip
was canceled, or at the earliest opportunity prior to crossing the
demarcation line as defined at Sec. 648.10(a). These reports are in
the form of an email to NMFS Office of Law Enforcement and include at
least the following information: Operator name;
[[Page 16949]]
vessel name; vessel permit number; port where vessel will return; date
trip started; estimated date/time of return to port; and a statement
from the operator that no fish were onboard and no fishing activity
occurred; and
(C) The owner or operator of the vessel operating under the DAS
program required to use the IVR call in as specified under Sec.
648.10(h) makes an initial trip cancelation notification to NMFS by
calling the IVR back at the time the trip was canceled, or at the
earliest opportunity prior to returning to port. This request must
include at least the following information: Operator name; vessel name;
vessel permit number; port where vessel will return; date trip started;
estimated date/time of return to port; and a statement from the
operator that no fish were onboard and no fishing activity occurred;
and
(D) The owner or operator of the vessel requesting a canceled trip
DAS credit, in addition to the requirements in paragraphs (b)(4)(ii)(B)
and (C) of this section, submits a written DAS credit request form to
NMFS within 30 days of the vessel's return to port from the canceled
trip. This application must include at least the following information:
Date and time when the vessel canceled the fishing trip; date and time
of trip departure and landing; operator name; owner/corporation name;
permit number; hull identification number; vessel name; date and time
notification requirements specified under paragraphs (b)(4)(ii)(B) and
(C) of this section were made; reason for canceling the trip; and
owner/operator signature and date; and
(E) The vessel trip report for the canceled trip as required under
Sec. 648.7(b) is submitted along with the DAS credit request form; and
(F) For DAS credits that are requested near the end of the fishing
year as defined at Sec. 648.2, and approved by the Regional
Administrator, the credited DAS apply to the fishing year in which the
canceled trip occurred. Credited DAS that remain unused at the end of
the fishing year or are not credited until the following fishing year
and may be carried over into the next fishing year, not to exceed the
maximum number of carryover DAS as specified under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section.
[FR Doc. 2012-7062 Filed 3-22-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P